Hi Etienne, > > I imagine that the fact that the fact that av will be a true R object > will help the summary() function to find the good method summary.aov > ().
Not only do you need to have R call the correct R fucntion, it must have a correct R object. When the conversion R-->Python happens, some information is lost, so the av object itself isn't a valid aov R object when Python--R conversion happens. -G > However, I tried to call explicitly summary_aov() with no success. > But I have to test it before to go further. > Thanks again !! > -Etienne > > > Gregory Warnes a écrit : >> >> Hi Etienne, >> >> The basic problem is that under the default conversion mode >> (BASIC_CONVERSION) all R objects are converted to roughly-equivalent >> python structures. As a consequence, the object 'av' isn't actually >> an R object, so r.summary(av) won't treat it as such. The simplest >> solution is to change the conversion mode to NO_CONVERSION adn then >> explicitly request conversion of an object when you need the python >> version. IE: >> >>> set_default_mode(NO_CONVERSION) >>> v = r.aov(r.formula("score~factor+Error(id_subject/factor)"), >>> data=Res)set_default_mode(BASIC_CONVERSION) >>> set_default_mode(BASIC_CONVERSION) >>> r.summary(av) >> >> -G >> >> On Dec 18, 2007, at 1:52PM , Etienne Gaudrain wrote: >> >>> Hi everyone, >>> >>> I'm new to RPy, and I came to this terrific module as I was used to >>> make some of my analyses in R, and I came to Python in >>> replacement of >>> Matlab. Formerly, I manipulated data with Matlab, put it in a MySQL >>> database, and made my stats in R via ODBC. I'm now thinking about >>> jumping one step by calling R directly from Python with RPy. >>> >>> The analysis I almost always have to do is a repeated measure ANOVA. >>> The way I do this in R is : >>> >>> >>> # /after odbc connection and sql query, Res contains my data >>> / >>> library('stats') >>> av <- aov( score~factor+Error(id_subject/factor), data=Res) >>> summary(av) >>> >>> >>> Now I tried the same in RPy : >>> >>> >>> # /retrieve data from sql query, Res is a dictionnary >>> / >>> r.library('stats') >>> av = r.aov("score~factor+Error(id_subject/factor)", data=Res) >>> >>> >>> This fails saying that "Error" isn't defined in the dataframe... >>> After reading some R doc about GLM, I found that using the R >>> function >>> formula() seemed to solve this problem: >>> >>> av = r.aov(r.formula("score~factor+Error(id_subject/factor)"), >>> data=Res) >>> r.summary(av) >>> >>> However, a new problem rose in r.summary(). This function returns >>> something that isn't readable, and that does not contain the p >>> values, or anything similar. It seems that the r.summary_aov() >>> function might be adequat, but this function returns an Error saying >>> that there is a NaN somewhere... >>> >>> Does anybody have an advice on how to perform the repeated >>> measure ANOVA? >>> Thanks! >>> -Etienne >>> >>> >>> PS : I use Windows XP, Python 2.5.1, Numpy 1.0.3.1 and RPy >>> 1.0.1-Numpy-py2.5 and R 2.6.1. >>> >>> -------------------------------------------------------------------- >>> ----- >>> SF.Net email is sponsored by: >>> Check out the new SourceForge.net Marketplace. >>> It's the best place to buy or sell services >>> for just about anything Open Source. >>> http://ad.doubleclick.net/clk;164216239;13503038;w?http://sf.net/ >>> marketplace<mime-attachment.txt> >> >> --------------------------------------------------------------------- >> --- >> >> --------------------------------------------------------------------- >> ---- >> SF.Net email is sponsored by: >> Check out the new SourceForge.net Marketplace. >> It's the best place to buy or sell services >> for just about anything Open Source. >> http://ad.doubleclick.net/clk;164216239;13503038;w?http://sf.net/ >> marketplace >> --------------------------------------------------------------------- >> --- >> >> _______________________________________________ >> rpy-list mailing list >> rpy-list@lists.sourceforge.net >> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/rpy-list >> > > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > --- > SF.Net email is sponsored by: > Check out the new SourceForge.net Marketplace. > It's the best place to buy or sell services > for just about anything Open Source. > http://ad.doubleclick.net/clk;164216239;13503038;w?http://sf.net/ > marketplace > _______________________________________________ > rpy-list mailing list > rpy-list@lists.sourceforge.net > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/rpy-list ------------------------------------------------------------------------- SF.Net email is sponsored by: Check out the new SourceForge.net Marketplace. It's the best place to buy or sell services for just about anything Open Source. http://ad.doubleclick.net/clk;164216239;13503038;w?http://sf.net/marketplace _______________________________________________ rpy-list mailing list rpy-list@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/rpy-list